US3163789A - Thermally balanced rotor - Google Patents

Thermally balanced rotor Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3163789A
US3163789A US234979A US23497962A US3163789A US 3163789 A US3163789 A US 3163789A US 234979 A US234979 A US 234979A US 23497962 A US23497962 A US 23497962A US 3163789 A US3163789 A US 3163789A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
ducts
balancing
rotor
core
cooling
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US234979A
Inventor
Leon T Rosenberg
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Allis Chalmers Corp
Original Assignee
Allis Chalmers Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Allis Chalmers Corp filed Critical Allis Chalmers Corp
Priority to US234979A priority Critical patent/US3163789A/en
Priority to GB42032/63A priority patent/GB975624A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3163789A publication Critical patent/US3163789A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02KDYNAMO-ELECTRIC MACHINES
    • H02K3/00Details of windings
    • H02K3/04Windings characterised by the conductor shape, form or construction, e.g. with bar conductors
    • H02K3/24Windings characterised by the conductor shape, form or construction, e.g. with bar conductors with channels or ducts for cooling medium between the conductors
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02KDYNAMO-ELECTRIC MACHINES
    • H02K9/00Arrangements for cooling or ventilating

Definitions

  • this invention relates to the thermal balancing of conductor cooled rotors of dynamoelectric machines, that is rotors whose windings are cooled by a flow of gas such as hydrogen through or in direct contact with the rotor conductors.
  • thermal unbalance In large generators, experience has shown that some rotors that were in good mechanical balance when cold, exhibited abnormal vibration at operating temperature. The most common cause of this behavior termed thermal unbalance is unequal temperature around the rotor periphery which causes the shaft to bow. In mild cases of thermal unbalance it is usually possible to rebalance mechanically for some intermediate load and temperature, and thus obtain a satisfactory mechanical balance over the full operating temperature range. In more severe cases, mechanical balancing alone sometimes proves inadequate.
  • the thermal balancing system of this invention overcomes the objections described above by providing thermal balancing ducts for carrying extra cooling fluid through portions of the rotor poles that normally do not need this additional cooling, and means for controlling the rate of flow through these cooling ducts without removing the rotor from the stator. This allows the balancer to compensate for unequal heat transfer in the difierent portions of the rotor and thus to obtain a good balance at all temperatures without detracting appreciably from the normal required cooling fluid for the rotor windings.
  • any rotor possessing the features of this invention that manifests thermal unbalance can be separately thermally balanced While remaining in the stator with the result that the best possible balance "is readily obtained for all operating conditions of the generator.
  • Another object of this invention is to provide a generator having a new and improved rotor having a better balance.
  • Another object of this invention is to provide a gas cooled generator having means for selectively directing additional cooling fluid through ducts of the rotor for thermal balancing, without removal of the rotor from the stator.
  • FIG. 1 is a side view partially in section of a large gas cooled turbogenerator incorporating the thermal balancing means of this invention
  • FIG. 2 is an enlarged cross section view of the rotor end portion illustrating the axial cooling ducts of the rotor and the thermal balancing means;
  • FIG. 3 is a cross section view taken along the line IIIIII of FIG..l; and 1 FIG. 4 is a cross section view taken along the line IVIV of FIG. 1 showing the location of the winding slots and the thermal balancing slots in the rotor core.
  • the thermal balancing means of this invention is illustrated in combination with a large hydrogen cooled two pole turbine generator although it could be used with any gas cooled dynamoelectric machine.
  • the generator 10 comprises an annular housing 11, a stator core and winding assembly 12 positioned within that housing and a rotor 13 mounted on bearings 14 and rotatably positioned within the bore of the stator.
  • the rotor 13 comprises an enlarged core sections 17 formed integrally with the shaft.
  • the shaft extensions 18 at either end are mounted in the bearings 14 and a blower 19 is mounted on one end of the shaft for forcing the cooling fluid in predetermined paths through the generator.
  • the core section 17 of the rotor has a larger diameter than the shaft 18 and is provided with longitudinally extending winding slots 20 arcuately spaced around the periphery of the rotor between the poles 21. Suitable conductors 22 are positioned in these slots to form the winding 23 for the rotor.
  • FIG. 4 of the drawings only one of the slots 20 is shown with conductors 22 but in the actual machine all slots 20 would have conductors therein.
  • these conductors are formed ofsilver bearing, hard drawn strip copper22 having concave beveled edges which combine in pairs with the sides of the slot insulating channels 24 to form longitudinally extending cooling ducts 25.
  • the longitudinal ducts may also be provided entirely within each conductor, or they may be formed by grooves provided between the conductors.
  • the copper conductors have openings suitably located along their length to form radial ducts which communicate with discharge openings 29 in theslot wedges 30 which are securely held in notches at the top of the conductor slots 20 to hold the windings in the slots against centrifugal force.
  • the slot wedges also provide a means for conducting the cooling gas radially outward from the cooling ducts 25 to the air gap of the generator from where the cooling fluid returns to the inlet 32 of the blower 19.
  • the rotor conductors 23 have inlets at their ends for receiving cooling gas from the blower 19. These inlets are located in pressurized regions or chambers 33a and 33b at the ends of the rotor core 17.
  • the chambers 33a and 33b are bounded by a coil retaining ring 34 that extends axially beyond the end of the core section 17, an annular disk 35 that abuts .the free end of the ring 34 and extends radially inward to the shaft extension 18, the shaft extension itself and the end of the rotor core section.
  • chamber 33a is connected to the discharge side 36 of the blower 19 through the heat exchangers in the housing 11, and slots 38 in the shaft extension 18 which extend under the hub of the impeller of the blower 19.
  • the portion of the shaft 18 between the hub of the blower and the annular disk 35 is covered by a sleeve 40 to prevent the escape of any of the high pressure gas into the inlet 32 of the blower.
  • a similar pressurized chamber 33b may be formed at the end of the rotor removed from the blower.
  • the pressurized gas enters this chamber 33b from the large pressurized cold gas chamber 41 in the housing '11, through openings 42 in the annular disk 43 as shownin FIG. 3.
  • An annular baflie 60 is placed at the entrance of the air gap between the rotor 13 and stator 12 to restrict the escape of gas into the air gap and thereby insure maintaining adequate ventilating pressure to provide the required flow of gas into the chamber 33b as well as into the cooling ducts 53a and 53b in the stator windings and core respectively.
  • a pair of axially extending grooves or slots 44 are formed in each pole portion 21 of the core. These slots are formed as close as practical to the winding slots 20.
  • a suitable wedge 45 is positioned and secured in the top of each slot 44 to form with the sides and bottom of the slot a thermal balancing duct 46 and provide a relatively smooth cylindrical outer surface.
  • the wedges 45 are also provided with radial discharge openings 49 suitably located along the rotor length for conducting the cooling fluid out of the duct into the air gap of the machine.
  • the thermal balance ducts 46 communicate with the pressurized coil end chambers 33a and 33b from which the cooling medium flows into the rotor cooling ducts 25 adjacent the windings.
  • suitable valves 50 are positioned at the ends of the thermal balancing ducts 46 adjacent the pressurized chambers. These valves 50 are normally closed, but when thermal balancing is desired they are used to control the amount of cooling gas flowing into the longitudinally extending thermal balancing ducts 46. As shown in the drawing, the valves are positioned at the extreme ends of the core portion so as to be easily accessible for adjustment without removing the rotor from the stator.
  • the valves 50 are preferably studs 51 provided with openings 52.
  • the studs 51 extend through the wedges and the full depth of the thermal slots 44 and 'threadedly engage the core 17.
  • the diameter of the studs 51 exceed the width of the groove sufliciently so that it engages the sides of the slots 44 and can thereby completely obstruct the flow of gas into the thermal balancing ducts 46, despite the holes 52 described below.
  • the studs 51 have a series of parallel openings or holes 52 extending therethrough at the same height as the thermal balancing duct 46.
  • the generator is filled with hydrogen within a gas tight housing 11.
  • hydrogen is brought into the inlet 32 of the blower 19 and forced radially outward through the heat exchangers which are mounted between the inner and outer casing 56, 57 of the housing.
  • the hydrogen also flows axially through the housing to the far end of the generator then radially inward to the pressurized cold gas chamber 41. From here it divides and flows axially through the generator air gap, stator core and windings, and rotor winding via chamber 33b, to the inlet 32 of the blower.
  • the vibration amplitude and phase angle changes are carefully determined. Then the machine is shut down and the valves 50 are adjusted as required with a suitable tool to admit cooling fluid into one or more of the thermal balancing ducts 46 so as to oflset the thermal unbalance, insofar as can be predicted. This is done without removing the rotor from the generator.
  • the generator is then started again and checked for balance in both the cold and hot condition. If the balance is still not satisfactory at all loads, the amplitude and phase changes are again noted and the generator is again shut down.
  • the appropriate valves are then readjusted making use of the response observed during the initial trial to obtain a more accurate estimate of the proper valve openings.
  • the generator is then started again and the procedure repeated if necessary until a satisfactory balance is obtained over the entire operating range.
  • the valves 50 are then looked in position by peening.
  • a rotor for a gas cooled generator comprising: a shaft having an enlarged core section, said core section having arcuately spaced pole portions and longitudinally extending winding slots formed in the area between said poles, conductors positioned in said winding slots, cooling ducts formed in said winding slots; longitudinally extending grooves formed in said pole portions of said core, cover means positioned in the top of said grooves to form thermal balancing ducts, longitudinally spaced apertures in said cover means for discharging cooling fluid from said balancing ducts, blower means for forcing cooling gas into cooling ducts and said thermal balancing ducts, valve means mounted on at least one end of said rotor in said balancing ducts for controlling the amount of gas admitted into said balancing ducts.
  • a rotor for a gas cooled generator comprismgr a shaft having an enlarged core section, said core section having arcuately spaced pole portions and longitudinally extending winding slots formed in the area between said poles, conductors positioned in said Winding slots and being insulated from each other, channel members for insulating said conductors from the walls of said slots, said conductor strips having surfaces that combine with the sides of said insulating channels to form cooling'ducts; longitudinally extending grooves formed in said pole portions of said core, cover means positioned in the top of said grooves to form thermal balancing ducts, longitudinally spaced apertures in said cover means for discharg ing cooling fluid from said balancing ducts, blower means 19 for forcing cooling gas into said cooling ducts and said balancing ducts, valve means mounted on at least one end of said rotor in said balancing ducts for controlling the amount of gas admitted into said balancing ducts.
  • a rotor for a gas cooled generator comprising: a shaft having an enlarged core section; said core section having arcuately spaced pole portions and longitudinally extending winding slots formed in the area between said poles, electrical conductors positioned in said winding slots, cooling duct formed in said winding slots; longitudinally extending grooves formed in said pole portions of said core near said Winding slots, cover means positioned in the top of said grooves to form thermal bale 1cing ducts; longitudinally spa ed apertures in said cover means for discharging cooling lluid from said balancing ducts; a pressure chamber formed at at least one of said core; the ends of said cooling and said balancing ducts opening into said pressure chamber, valves at the end of said balancing ducts adjacent said pressure chamber for varying the amount of gas admitted into said balancing ducts, blower means driven by said shaft for sup plying high pressure cooling gas and means for conducting gas from the dis-charge side of said blower into said pressure chambers.
  • a rotor for a gas cooled generator comprising: a shaft having an enlarged core section; said core section having arcuately spaced pole portions and longitudinally extending Winding slots formed in the area between said poles; electrical conductors positioned in said winding slots; cooling ducts formed in said winding slots; longitudinally extending grooves formed in said pole portions of said core near said wi" ding slots; cover means positioned in the top of said grooves to form thermal balancing ducts; longitudinally spaced apertures in said cover means for discharging cooling fluid from said balancing ducts; retaining rings surrounding the ends of said core section and extending axially outward; annular disks abutting the free ends of said retaining rings and extending radially inward toward said shaft to form a pressure chamber at each end of said core between said shaft, said core, said annular disks and retaining rings; the ends of said cooling and said balancing ducts opening into said pressure chambers, valves at each end of said balancing ducts for
  • a rotor for a gas cooled generator comprising: a shaft having an enlarged core section; said core section having arcuately spaced pole portions and longitudinally extending Winding slots formed in the area between said poles; electrical conductors positioned in said winding slots cooling ducts formed in said winding slots; longitudinally extending grooves formed in said pole portions of said core near said winding slots; cover means positioned in the top of said grooves to form thermal balancing ducts; longitudinally spaced apertures in said cover means for conducting cooling fluid from sm'd balancing ducts; a pressure chamber formed at at least one end of said core; the ends of said cooling and said balancing ducts opening into said pressure chamber, valves at the end of said balancing ducts adjacent said pressure chamher, said valves comprising a stud extending through said cover and said balancing duct and engaging said core, said stud having apertures therethrough that can be aligned with said balancing ducts and means for rotating said stud to vary the
  • a rotor for a gas cooled generator comprising: a shaft having an enlarged core section; said core section having arcuately spaced pole portions and longitudinally extending v' ding slots formed in the area between said poles; electrical conductors positioned in said winding slots and insulated from each other; channel members positioned in said slots for insulating said conductors from said core, said conductors having concaved beveled edges that combine with the sides of said slot insulating channels to form cooling ducts; longitudinally extending grooves formed in said pole portions of said core near said winding slots; cover means positioned in the top of said grooves to form thermal balancing ducts; longitudinally spaced apertures in said cover means for conducting cooling fluid from aid balancing ducts; a retaining ring surrounding the ends of said core section and extending axially outward; annular disks abutting the free ends of said retaining rings and extending radially inward toward said shaft to form a pressure chamber at each end of said core between said shaft

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Power Engineering (AREA)
  • Motor Or Generator Cooling System (AREA)

Description

1964 L. T. ROSENBERG 3, 6 89 THERMALLY BALANCED ROTOR Filed Nov. 2, 1962 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 1964 L. T. ROSENBERG 3,153,789
THERMALLY BALANCED ROTOR Filed NOV. 2, 1962 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 QHORAW United States Patent 63,789 THERMALLY BALANCED ROTOR Leon T. Rosenberg, Wauwatosa, Wis, assignor to Allis- Chahners Manufacturing Company, Milwaukee, Wis. Filed Nov. 2, 1%2, Ser. No. 234,919 8 Claims. (Cl. 310-53) This invention relates generally to the balancing of rotors of large dynarnoelectric machines. More specifically this invention relates to the thermal balancing of conductor cooled rotors of dynamoelectric machines, that is rotors whose windings are cooled by a flow of gas such as hydrogen through or in direct contact with the rotor conductors.
In large generators, experience has shown that some rotors that were in good mechanical balance when cold, exhibited abnormal vibration at operating temperature. The most common cause of this behavior termed thermal unbalance is unequal temperature around the rotor periphery which causes the shaft to bow. In mild cases of thermal unbalance it is usually possible to rebalance mechanically for some intermediate load and temperature, and thus obtain a satisfactory mechanical balance over the full operating temperature range. In more severe cases, mechanical balancing alone sometimes proves inadequate.
In the past, most cases of thermal balancing of cylindrical rotors were accomplished by throttling the flow of gas in certain of the normal cooling ducts. When properly applied, this method was highly successful but because the cooling medium had to be throttled it could only be employed on rotors havingadequate temperature rise margin. Moreover, in rotors cooled by direct contact of the cooling medium with the conductors, selective throttling of the gas flow required the removal of the rotor from the stator, a very costly and time consuming operation, for each thermal balance trial. Since two or more trials would usually be expected to obtain a satisfactory thermal balance, this method was considered prohibitive.
The thermal balancing system of this invention overcomes the objections described above by providing thermal balancing ducts for carrying extra cooling fluid through portions of the rotor poles that normally do not need this additional cooling, and means for controlling the rate of flow through these cooling ducts without removing the rotor from the stator. This allows the balancer to compensate for unequal heat transfer in the difierent portions of the rotor and thus to obtain a good balance at all temperatures without detracting appreciably from the normal required cooling fluid for the rotor windings. After having been mechanically balanced, in the'usual manner, any rotor possessing the features of this invention that manifests thermal unbalance can be separately thermally balanced While remaining in the stator with the result that the best possible balance "is readily obtained for all operating conditions of the generator.
Therefore, it is the object of this invention to provide a new and improved dynamoelectric machine.
Another object of this invention is to provide a generator having a new and improved rotor having a better balance.
Another object of this invention is to provide a gas cooled generator having means for selectively directing additional cooling fluid through ducts of the rotor for thermal balancing, without removal of the rotor from the stator.
Other objects and advantages of this invention will be apparent from the following description when read in connection with the accompanying drawings in which:
FIG. 1 is a side view partially in section of a large gas cooled turbogenerator incorporating the thermal balancing means of this invention;
FIG. 2 is an enlarged cross section view of the rotor end portion illustrating the axial cooling ducts of the rotor and the thermal balancing means;
FIG. 3 is a cross section view taken along the line IIIIII of FIG..l; and 1 FIG. 4 is a cross section view taken along the line IVIV of FIG. 1 showing the location of the winding slots and the thermal balancing slots in the rotor core.
The thermal balancing means of this invention is illustrated in combination with a large hydrogen cooled two pole turbine generator although it could be used with any gas cooled dynamoelectric machine. As specifically shown in the drawing the generator 10 comprises an annular housing 11, a stator core and winding assembly 12 positioned within that housing and a rotor 13 mounted on bearings 14 and rotatably positioned within the bore of the stator. The rotor 13 comprises an enlarged core sections 17 formed integrally with the shaft. The shaft extensions 18 at either end are mounted in the bearings 14 and a blower 19 is mounted on one end of the shaft for forcing the cooling fluid in predetermined paths through the generator.
The core section 17 of the rotor has a larger diameter than the shaft 18 and is provided with longitudinally extending winding slots 20 arcuately spaced around the periphery of the rotor between the poles 21. Suitable conductors 22 are positioned in these slots to form the winding 23 for the rotor. In FIG. 4 of the drawings, only one of the slots 20 is shown with conductors 22 but in the actual machine all slots 20 would have conductors therein. In the conductor cooled machine as illustrated, these conductors are formed ofsilver bearing, hard drawn strip copper22 having concave beveled edges which combine in pairs with the sides of the slot insulating channels 24 to form longitudinally extending cooling ducts 25. The longitudinal ducts may also be provided entirely within each conductor, or they may be formed by grooves provided between the conductors. The copper conductors have openings suitably located along their length to form radial ducts which communicate with discharge openings 29 in theslot wedges 30 which are securely held in notches at the top of the conductor slots 20 to hold the windings in the slots against centrifugal force. Thus, the slot wedges also provide a means for conducting the cooling gas radially outward from the cooling ducts 25 to the air gap of the generator from where the cooling fluid returns to the inlet 32 of the blower 19.
The rotor conductors 23 have inlets at their ends for receiving cooling gas from the blower 19. These inlets are located in pressurized regions or chambers 33a and 33b at the ends of the rotor core 17. The chambers 33a and 33b are bounded by a coil retaining ring 34 that extends axially beyond the end of the core section 17, an annular disk 35 that abuts .the free end of the ring 34 and extends radially inward to the shaft extension 18, the shaft extension itself and the end of the rotor core section. At the blower end, chamber 33a is connected to the discharge side 36 of the blower 19 through the heat exchangers in the housing 11, and slots 38 in the shaft extension 18 which extend under the hub of the impeller of the blower 19. The portion of the shaft 18 between the hub of the blower and the annular disk 35 is covered by a sleeve 40 to prevent the escape of any of the high pressure gas into the inlet 32 of the blower.
A similar pressurized chamber 33b may be formed at the end of the rotor removed from the blower. The pressurized gas enters this chamber 33b from the large pressurized cold gas chamber 41 in the housing '11, through openings 42 in the annular disk 43 as shownin FIG. 3. An annular baflie 60 is placed at the entrance of the air gap between the rotor 13 and stator 12 to restrict the escape of gas into the air gap and thereby insure maintaining adequate ventilating pressure to provide the required flow of gas into the chamber 33b as well as into the cooling ducts 53a and 53b in the stator windings and core respectively.
A pair of axially extending grooves or slots 44 are formed in each pole portion 21 of the core. These slots are formed as close as practical to the winding slots 20. A suitable wedge 45 is positioned and secured in the top of each slot 44 to form with the sides and bottom of the slot a thermal balancing duct 46 and provide a relatively smooth cylindrical outer surface. The wedges 45 are also provided with radial discharge openings 49 suitably located along the rotor length for conducting the cooling fluid out of the duct into the air gap of the machine.
At each end of the core section 17, the thermal balance ducts 46 communicate with the pressurized coil end chambers 33a and 33b from which the cooling medium flows into the rotor cooling ducts 25 adjacent the windings. To prevent the escape of the cooling medium into the thermal balance ducts 46, suitable valves 50 are positioned at the ends of the thermal balancing ducts 46 adjacent the pressurized chambers. These valves 50 are normally closed, but when thermal balancing is desired they are used to control the amount of cooling gas flowing into the longitudinally extending thermal balancing ducts 46. As shown in the drawing, the valves are positioned at the extreme ends of the core portion so as to be easily accessible for adjustment without removing the rotor from the stator.
As illustrated in the drawings, the valves 50 are preferably studs 51 provided with openings 52. The studs 51 extend through the wedges and the full depth of the thermal slots 44 and 'threadedly engage the core 17. The diameter of the studs 51 exceed the width of the groove sufliciently so that it engages the sides of the slots 44 and can thereby completely obstruct the flow of gas into the thermal balancing ducts 46, despite the holes 52 described below. The studs 51 have a series of parallel openings or holes 52 extending therethrough at the same height as the thermal balancing duct 46. When these holes 52 are transverse to the duct 46, their normal position, the stud completely obstructs the duct because of its larger diameter and no gas can pass into the core portion of the rotor in the ducts 46. On the other hand when the holes 52 are parallel to the duct 46, a full volume of gas flows through the studs 51 into the core portion in the duct. Naturally, the volume of gas flowing past the stud can be varied from zero to maximum by changing the angular position of the stud. This is done by merely rotating the stud 51. The screw driver slot 53 at the top of the stud provides a means for rotating the stud and serves to indicate the degree of valve opening. When the generator has been finally thermally balanced the metal surrounding the bolt is peened into the screw driver slot of the stud to fix its position relative to the thermal balance duct 46.
It is significant that none of the thermal balancing ducts are required for cooling of the generator. Any gas flowing in these ducts provides additional cooling and hence does not detract appreciably from the capacity of the generator as would be the case if necessary cooling gas were throttled, corresponding to prior art practice.
In operation, the generator is filled with hydrogen within a gas tight housing 11. When the shaft is started up, hydrogen is brought into the inlet 32 of the blower 19 and forced radially outward through the heat exchangers which are mounted between the inner and outer casing 56, 57 of the housing. In traversing the heat exchangers, the hydrogen also flows axially through the housing to the far end of the generator then radially inward to the pressurized cold gas chamber 41. From here it divides and flows axially through the generator air gap, stator core and windings, and rotor winding via chamber 33b, to the inlet 32 of the blower. Another portion of the cooled hydrogen flows radially inward at the blower end of the housing, then axially through the slots 38 in the shaft extensions 18 into the chamber 33a and thence into the rotor windings at the blower end. The discharging hot gas from both ends of the rotor windings flows radially outward into the air gap of the generator and out through the air gap to the inlet 32 of the blower.
Should a rotor be found to exhibit thermal unbalance, i.e., to become unbalanced as its temperature changes, the vibration amplitude and phase angle changes are carefully determined. Then the machine is shut down and the valves 50 are adjusted as required with a suitable tool to admit cooling fluid into one or more of the thermal balancing ducts 46 so as to oflset the thermal unbalance, insofar as can be predicted. This is done without removing the rotor from the generator.
The generator is then started again and checked for balance in both the cold and hot condition. If the balance is still not satisfactory at all loads, the amplitude and phase changes are again noted and the generator is again shut down. The appropriate valves are then readjusted making use of the response observed during the initial trial to obtain a more accurate estimate of the proper valve openings. The generator is then started again and the procedure repeated if necessary until a satisfactory balance is obtained over the entire operating range. The valves 50 are then looked in position by peening.
Although but one embodiment of this invention has been illustrated and described it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and changes can be made herein without departing from the spirit of the invention or the scope of the appended claims.
Having now particularly described and ascertained the nature of my said invention and the manner in which it is to be performed, I declare that what I claim is:
1. A rotor for a gas cooled generator comprising: a shaft having an enlarged core section, said core section having arcuately spaced pole portions and longitudinally extending winding slots formed in the area between said poles, conductors positioned in said winding slots, cooling ducts formed in said core; longitudinally extending grooves formed in said pole portions of said core, cover means positioned in the top of said grooves to form thermal balancing ducts, means for forcing cooling gas into said cooling ducts and said balancing ducts, longitudinally spaced apertures in said cover means for discharging cooling fluid from said balancing ducts, and valve means mounted in said balancing ducts for controlling the amount of gas admitted into said balancing ducts.
2. A rotor for a gas cooled generator comprising: a shaft having an enlarged core section, said core section having arcuately spaced pole portions and longitudinally extending winding slots formed in the area between said poles, conductors positioned in said winding slots, cooling ducts formed in said winding slots; longitudinally extending grooves formed in said pole portions of said core, cover means positioned in the top of said grooves to form thermal balancing ducts, longitudinally spaced apertures in said cover means for discharging cooling fluid from said balancing ducts, blower means for forcing cooling gas into cooling ducts and said thermal balancing ducts, valve means mounted on at least one end of said rotor in said balancing ducts for controlling the amount of gas admitted into said balancing ducts.
3. A rotor for a gas cooled generator comprismgr a shaft having an enlarged core section, said core section having arcuately spaced pole portions and longitudinally extending winding slots formed in the area between said poles, conductors positioned in said Winding slots and being insulated from each other, channel members for insulating said conductors from the walls of said slots, said conductor strips having surfaces that combine with the sides of said insulating channels to form cooling'ducts; longitudinally extending grooves formed in said pole portions of said core, cover means positioned in the top of said grooves to form thermal balancing ducts, longitudinally spaced apertures in said cover means for discharg ing cooling fluid from said balancing ducts, blower means 19 for forcing cooling gas into said cooling ducts and said balancing ducts, valve means mounted on at least one end of said rotor in said balancing ducts for controlling the amount of gas admitted into said balancing ducts.
4. A rotor for a gas cooled generator comprising: a shaft having an enlarged core section; said core section having arcuately spaced pole portions and longitudinally extending winding slots formed in the area between said poles, electrical conductors positioned in said winding slots, cooling duct formed in said winding slots; longitudinally extending grooves formed in said pole portions of said core near said Winding slots, cover means positioned in the top of said grooves to form thermal bale 1cing ducts; longitudinally spa ed apertures in said cover means for discharging cooling lluid from said balancing ducts; a pressure chamber formed at at least one of said core; the ends of said cooling and said balancing ducts opening into said pressure chamber, valves at the end of said balancing ducts adjacent said pressure chamber for varying the amount of gas admitted into said balancing ducts, blower means driven by said shaft for sup plying high pressure cooling gas and means for conducting gas from the dis-charge side of said blower into said pressure chambers.
5. A rotor for a gas cooled generator comprising: a shaft having an enlarged core section; said core section having arcuately spaced pole portions and longitudinally extending Winding slots formed in the area between said poles; electrical conductors positioned in said winding slots; cooling ducts formed in said winding slots; longitudinally extending grooves formed in said pole portions of said core near said wi" ding slots; cover means positioned in the top of said grooves to form thermal balancing ducts; longitudinally spaced apertures in said cover means for discharging cooling fluid from said balancing ducts; retaining rings surrounding the ends of said core section and extending axially outward; annular disks abutting the free ends of said retaining rings and extending radially inward toward said shaft to form a pressure chamber at each end of said core between said shaft, said core, said annular disks and retaining rings; the ends of said cooling and said balancing ducts opening into said pressure chambers, valves at each end of said balancing ducts for varying the amount of gas admitted into said balancing ducts, blower means driven by said shaft for supplying high pressure cooling gas and means for conducting gas from the high pressure side of said blower into said pressure chambers.
6. A rotor for a gas cooled generator comprising: a shaft having an enlarged core section; said core section having arcuately spaced pole portions and longitudinally extending Winding slots formed in the area between said poles; electrical conductors positioned in said winding slots cooling ducts formed in said winding slots; longitudinally extending grooves formed in said pole portions of said core near said winding slots; cover means positioned in the top of said grooves to form thermal balancing ducts; longitudinally spaced apertures in said cover means for conducting cooling fluid from sm'd balancing ducts; a pressure chamber formed at at least one end of said core; the ends of said cooling and said balancing ducts opening into said pressure chamber, valves at the end of said balancing ducts adjacent said pressure chamher, said valves comprising a stud extending through said cover and said balancing duct and engaging said core, said stud having apertures therethrough that can be aligned with said balancing ducts and means for rotating said stud to vary the position of said apertures relative to said balancing ducts and thereby vary the amount of gas admited into said balancing ducts, blower means driven by said shaft for supplying high pressure cooling gas; and
conductors combin rig with said slot insulating channels to dorm cooling ducts; longitudinally extending grooves formed in said pole portions of said core near said Winding slots; cover means positioned in the top of said grooves to form thermal balancing ducts; longitudinally spaced apertures in said cover means for conducting cooling fluid from said balancing ducts; a pressure chamber formed at at least one end of said core; the ends of sad cooling and said balancing ducts opening into said pressure chamber; valves at the end of said balancing ducts adjacent said pressure chambers; said valves comprising a stud extending through said cover, said balancing duct and engaging said core; said stud having apertures therethrough that can be aligned with said balancing ducts; means for rotating said bolt to vary the position of said apertures relative to said balancing ducts; the diameter of said stud being larger than the width of said balancing duct so as to completely close said balancing duct when said apertures are transverse to said balancing duct; blower means driven by said shaft for supplying high pressure cooling gas; and means for conducting gas from the discharge side of said blower into said pressure chambers.
8. A rotor for a gas cooled generator comprising: a shaft having an enlarged core section; said core section having arcuately spaced pole portions and longitudinally extending v' ding slots formed in the area between said poles; electrical conductors positioned in said winding slots and insulated from each other; channel members positioned in said slots for insulating said conductors from said core, said conductors having concaved beveled edges that combine with the sides of said slot insulating channels to form cooling ducts; longitudinally extending grooves formed in said pole portions of said core near said winding slots; cover means positioned in the top of said grooves to form thermal balancing ducts; longitudinally spaced apertures in said cover means for conducting cooling fluid from aid balancing ducts; a retaining ring surrounding the ends of said core section and extending axially outward; annular disks abutting the free ends of said retaining rings and extending radially inward toward said shaft to form a pressure chamber at each end of said core between said shaft; said core; said annular disks and retaining ring; the ends of said cooling and said balancing ducts opening into said pressure chambers; valves at each end of said balancing ducts; said valves comprising a stud extending through said cover, said balancing duct, and engaging said core; said stud having aperttn'es therethrough that can be aligned with said balancing ducts; and means for rotating said bolt to vary the position or" said apertures relative to said balancing ducts; the diameter of said stud being larger than the Width or" said balancing duct so as to completely close said balancing duct when said apertures are transverse to said balancing duct; blower means mounted on said shaft; conduits formed in said shaft communicating from said pressurized chamber beneath said blower to the discharge side of said blower for conducting high pressure gas into said pressure chambers.
References Cited in the file of this patent FOREIGN PATENTS 648,830 France Aug. 20, 1928

Claims (1)

1. A ROTOR FOR A GAS COOLED GENREATOR COMPRISING: A SHAFT HAVING AN ENLARGED CORE SECTION, SAID CORE SECTION HAVING ARCUATELY SPACED POLE PORTIONS AND LONGITUDINALLY EXTENDING WINDING SLOTS FORMED IN THE AREA BETWEEN SAID POLES, CONDUCTORS POSITIONED IN SAID WINDING SLOTS, COOLING DUCTS FORMED IN SAID CORE; LONGITUDINALLY EXTENDING GROOVES FORMED IN SAID POLE PORTIONS OF SAID CORE, COVER MEANS POSITIONED IN THE TOP OF SAID GROOVES TO FORM THERMAL BALANCING DUCTS, MEANS FOR FORCING COOLING GAS INTO SAID COOL-
US234979A 1962-11-02 1962-11-02 Thermally balanced rotor Expired - Lifetime US3163789A (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US234979A US3163789A (en) 1962-11-02 1962-11-02 Thermally balanced rotor
GB42032/63A GB975624A (en) 1962-11-02 1963-10-24 Improved dynamo-electric machine rotor

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US234979A US3163789A (en) 1962-11-02 1962-11-02 Thermally balanced rotor

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3163789A true US3163789A (en) 1964-12-29

Family

ID=22883552

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US234979A Expired - Lifetime US3163789A (en) 1962-11-02 1962-11-02 Thermally balanced rotor

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (1) US3163789A (en)
GB (1) GB975624A (en)

Cited By (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3270225A (en) * 1964-06-17 1966-08-30 Gen Motors Corp Rotor structure
US3622820A (en) * 1969-09-30 1971-11-23 Asea Ab Rotor cooling system comprisng means for avoiding thermal unbalance in a liquid-cooled electrical machine
DE2638579A1 (en) * 1976-08-27 1978-03-02 Bbc Brown Boveri & Cie Gas-cooled turbogenerator rotor - has holes for cooling gas made in slot wedges which have dovetail elements partly closing them
US4119872A (en) * 1975-04-05 1978-10-10 Lucas Industries Limited Dynamo electric machine
US4370800A (en) * 1979-11-01 1983-02-01 Kuzmin Viktor V Method of balancing electrical machine rotor
US4609840A (en) * 1984-11-05 1986-09-02 General Electric Company Baffle for improving coolant gas flow distribution in the gap region of a gas cooled dynamoelectric machine
US4908537A (en) * 1988-04-27 1990-03-13 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Pole ventilation of radially ventilated rotors
US4922147A (en) * 1988-11-25 1990-05-01 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Apparatus and method for thermal balancing of the rotor of a dynamo-electric machine
US20050135927A1 (en) * 2003-12-22 2005-06-23 Kengo Iwashige Dynamo-electric machine
US20060024157A1 (en) * 2004-06-01 2006-02-02 Alstom Technology Ltd. Gas-cooled electrical machine with pressure charging
US7009317B2 (en) 2004-01-14 2006-03-07 Caterpillar Inc. Cooling system for an electric motor
US20070013241A1 (en) * 2005-07-13 2007-01-18 Schiferl Rich F Lamination stack cooling path
WO2010031881A1 (en) * 2008-09-17 2010-03-25 Indar Electric, S.L. Rotor of an electrical generator for aeolian application with cooling flows in at least one of the coil heads
US20110210561A1 (en) * 2008-09-17 2011-09-01 Xabier Calvo Madariaga Rotor of an electrical generator for aeolian application with cooling flows in at least one of the coil heads
DE102010063973A1 (en) * 2010-12-22 2012-06-28 Bayerische Motoren Werke Aktiengesellschaft Electric machine e.g. permanently actuated synchronous motor, for electrical driven vehicle, has air flow generating unit for creating air flow in closed circuit, where apertures of rotor and heat exchanger are merged in closed circuit
CN103216573A (en) * 2013-05-06 2013-07-24 东北大学 Method of using radiation heating to restrain vibration of rotor
CN103234003A (en) * 2013-04-27 2013-08-07 东北大学 Rotor system automatic balancing device controlled by thermal radiation

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2435847A1 (en) * 1978-09-05 1980-04-04 Antonov Jury Direct liq. cooled rotor for turbogenerator - has rotatable outlet nozzles on outer rotor conductors for adjusting flow in individual winding paths

Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR648830A (en) * 1927-06-28 1928-12-14 Thomson Houston Comp Francaise Method of construction of turbo-generator rotors

Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR648830A (en) * 1927-06-28 1928-12-14 Thomson Houston Comp Francaise Method of construction of turbo-generator rotors

Cited By (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3270225A (en) * 1964-06-17 1966-08-30 Gen Motors Corp Rotor structure
US3622820A (en) * 1969-09-30 1971-11-23 Asea Ab Rotor cooling system comprisng means for avoiding thermal unbalance in a liquid-cooled electrical machine
US4119872A (en) * 1975-04-05 1978-10-10 Lucas Industries Limited Dynamo electric machine
DE2638579A1 (en) * 1976-08-27 1978-03-02 Bbc Brown Boveri & Cie Gas-cooled turbogenerator rotor - has holes for cooling gas made in slot wedges which have dovetail elements partly closing them
US4370800A (en) * 1979-11-01 1983-02-01 Kuzmin Viktor V Method of balancing electrical machine rotor
US4609840A (en) * 1984-11-05 1986-09-02 General Electric Company Baffle for improving coolant gas flow distribution in the gap region of a gas cooled dynamoelectric machine
US4908537A (en) * 1988-04-27 1990-03-13 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Pole ventilation of radially ventilated rotors
US4922147A (en) * 1988-11-25 1990-05-01 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Apparatus and method for thermal balancing of the rotor of a dynamo-electric machine
US20050135927A1 (en) * 2003-12-22 2005-06-23 Kengo Iwashige Dynamo-electric machine
US7247958B2 (en) * 2003-12-22 2007-07-24 Hitachi, Ltd. Dynamo-electric machine
US7009317B2 (en) 2004-01-14 2006-03-07 Caterpillar Inc. Cooling system for an electric motor
US20060024157A1 (en) * 2004-06-01 2006-02-02 Alstom Technology Ltd. Gas-cooled electrical machine with pressure charging
US7271515B2 (en) * 2004-06-01 2007-09-18 Alstom Technology Ltd. Gas-cooled electrical machine with pressure charging
US20070013241A1 (en) * 2005-07-13 2007-01-18 Schiferl Rich F Lamination stack cooling path
WO2010031881A1 (en) * 2008-09-17 2010-03-25 Indar Electric, S.L. Rotor of an electrical generator for aeolian application with cooling flows in at least one of the coil heads
US20110210561A1 (en) * 2008-09-17 2011-09-01 Xabier Calvo Madariaga Rotor of an electrical generator for aeolian application with cooling flows in at least one of the coil heads
DE102010063973A1 (en) * 2010-12-22 2012-06-28 Bayerische Motoren Werke Aktiengesellschaft Electric machine e.g. permanently actuated synchronous motor, for electrical driven vehicle, has air flow generating unit for creating air flow in closed circuit, where apertures of rotor and heat exchanger are merged in closed circuit
CN103234003A (en) * 2013-04-27 2013-08-07 东北大学 Rotor system automatic balancing device controlled by thermal radiation
CN103234003B (en) * 2013-04-27 2015-02-04 东北大学 Rotor system automatic balancing device controlled by thermal radiation
CN103216573A (en) * 2013-05-06 2013-07-24 东北大学 Method of using radiation heating to restrain vibration of rotor
CN103216573B (en) * 2013-05-06 2015-09-23 东北大学 A kind of method utilizing radoal heating to suppress rotor oscillation

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB975624A (en) 1964-11-18

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3163789A (en) Thermally balanced rotor
US3110827A (en) Dynamoelectric machine
US5189325A (en) Liquid cooling the rotor of an electrical machine
US2217430A (en) Water-cooled stator for dynamoelectric machines
US3265912A (en) Dynamoelectric machine
US2898484A (en) Refrigeration cooling of electrical machines
CA1282102C (en) Wedge locking device in a radially ventilated rotor
US2920218A (en) Supercharged dynamoelectric machine with cooling gas in contact with conductors
US3249775A (en) Liquid-circulation cooling device for the rotors of high-power turbo-alternators rotating at high speed
US2653255A (en) Separate end-turn rotorventilation
CA2011021C (en) An improved cooling system for generators
US2887061A (en) Totally enclosed canned motor pump
US3005119A (en) Ventilation of the end windings of large dynamoelectric machine rotors
EP0917279B1 (en) Motor cooling
US2413525A (en) Totally enclosed dynamoelectric machine
US2951954A (en) Fluid-coupled rotor for dynamoelectric machine
US2221567A (en) Turbogenerator rotor
US2970233A (en) Ventilating system for a dynamo-electric machine
US1877904A (en) Rotor ventilation for turbo generators
US3916230A (en) Liquid-cooled rotor for dynamoelectric machines
US2755395A (en) Dynamoelectric machines
US2285436A (en) Motor and cooling means therefor
US2991377A (en) Cooling of flame proof motors
GB1173245A (en) Improvements relating to Dynamo Electric Machines
US4751412A (en) Dynamoelectric machine with cam locked air gap baffle assembly